Antoinette Brown Blackwell (1825–1921) American minister
September 1874, Popular Science Monthly Vol. 5, Article: The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction , p. 607
The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction (1874)
September 1874, Popular Science Monthly Vol. 5, Article: The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction , p. 607
The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction (1874)
Antoinette Brown Blackwell (1825–1921) American minister
September 1874, Popular Science Monthly Vol. 5, Article: The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction , p. 607
The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction (1874)
“Every action, physical or psychical, involves either integration or disintegration.”
Antoinette Brown Blackwell (1825–1921) American minister
September 1874, Popular Science Monthly Vol. 5, Article: The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction , p. 607
The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction (1874)
Antoinette Brown Blackwell (1825–1921) American minister
September 1874, Popular Science Monthly Vol. 5, Article: The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction , p. 608
The Alleged Antagonism Between Growth and Reproduction (1874)
Simon Kuznets (1901–1985) economist
Simon Kuznets in: Herbert David Croly eds. (1962) The New Republic Vol. 147. p. 29: About rethinking the system of national accounting
Theodore Levitt (1925–2006) American economist and professor at Harvard Business School
Source: Marketing Myopia, 1960, p. 1; Lead paragraph
Mihajlo D. Mesarovic (1928) Serbian academic
As cited in: Joel Jay Kassiola (1990) The Death of Industrial Civilization. p. 48
Mankind at the Turning Point, (1974)
Source: https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/11654664-the-difference-between-a-fixed-mindset-and-a-growth-mindset
“Growth for the sake of growth is a cancerous madness.”
Edward Abbey (1927–1989) American author and essayist
"Water", p. 114
Desert Solitaire (1968)
Source: The Journey Home: Some Words in Defense of the American West
“Growth is exciting; growth is dynamic and alarming.”
Vita Sackville-West (1892–1962) English writer and gardener
Twelve Days (1928) p. 9; part of this appears to have also become paraphrased in the form:
Context: It is necessary to write, if the days are not to slip emptily by. How else, indeed, to clap the net over the butterfly of the moment? for the moment passes, it is forgotten; the mood is gone; life itself is gone. That is where the writer scores over his fellows: he catches the changes of his mind on the hop. Growth is exciting; growth is dynamic and alarming. Growth of the soul, growth of the mind; how the observation of last year seems childish, superficial; how this year — even this week — even with this new phrase — it seems to us that we have grown to a new maturity. It may be a fallacious persuasion, but at least it is stimulating, and so long as it persists, one does not stagnate.
I look back as through a telescope, and see, in the little bright circle of the glass, moving flocks and ruined cities.